The New York Herald Newspaper, July 16, 1865, Page 4

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NeW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JULY 16, 1866, obs fel sentenced Joba Hoey and Samuel McLean to twenty, form, beautifully engrossed, will be the chief | Appofmtment ofa Provisional Governor : hs netting 9 soldier tn, Meme will represent s copperhead snake, rampant, pag’ wing than s country : hoped that thie severe sentence wil have assluiary oftct The President has now provided all the late se taapetnn th toeten of eran whicn sous 10 90 0007 uning ont of Sn SOMONE A dann, wit Be rm me of gens Sie Sa ee prevalent in this city at the present time. * Charles H. Walters, whose sentence of banging forthe | Marbleu has entire charge of the arrange- The appointment of Judge William Marvin 98 | aithough none of these things are neglected by murder of his mistress, Nanoy Vincent, was lately com- | mont, under Messrs. Belmont and Barlow’s eu- | Provisional Governor of the State of Florida | the “old man,” and everything is fsh that season by Governor Fontes to. canteens ot ame | Pecvislen: = ™ compleies the list, and the machinery for the | comes into his net. When Weed is in Wash ee Mi, es The Tammany have | Festoration of the Southern States, under the | ington Grecley should be wide awake. on Friday lat, Walters expressed in the warmest lan | | . Hel semneener, slmeedy ang | President's practical policy, is now in full op- ppg guoge thanks counsel for the efforte made in ra ae scones yo ea cereals nad to warden Sutton and.all te employes o | dictate their policy and thelr candidates, ‘This | eration. Judge Marvin is a native of this State, Mitek of Gamignetiontme ET the Tombe for the kind and considerate manner in which | club is called the Americus, and its President but has been for several years a resident of tion of hes they had treated him whilp in their harwe is the Hon. Wm. M. Tweed, Deputy Stroet Com- | Key West, where he served in the capacity of Epa ~Gbghaaeaagshsiee niebage sar boiler steam on the northwest corner District Judge. duti the effect upon emigration to eg omen coopera! treet exploded | ™issloner, Chairman of the Tammany General | United States a pe and | states which we slways anticipated. The Mone tr awsok yestoriay forenoon, from’ what | Committee, Chairman of the Board of Super- | instructions in’ his new capacity are the same | O11. tends in consider- about to the pul are being bought up cause in not known, demolishing ® portion of the estab- | visors, member of the Volunteering Committee, | *# bave been given Provisional Govern- | 34, quantities, and the floating labor of the Tishment, balling the freman, Patrick Collins; danger-| member of the Riot Claims’ Committee, mem- | °F of all the other Southern States, country is finding its way out to a region where orualy scalding two other men, named Jasob B. Lake and ber of the Family Aid Committee, member of In all of those States where the Provisional dis in, The of the General Owen Rely, and sltgty tniering °™ | the New Court House Committee, joint owner ne et ee Land Office show that during the month of June, ‘A fre, supposed to have been the work of an incenal- | of the Transoript, associate in the Aldermanic os gratin. genarany at one point in Minnesota alone, three hundred ary, occurred yesterday afternoon at 74 Bleecker street, | “ring,” associate in the Harlem bridge con- affairs connected govern | and forty-five acres of public land, and nearly extending to the rear of @41 Broadway. The aggregate | oer, associate in the Battery enlargement job, | ent are fast becoming adjusted to the new | Ji 1 ousand acres of Indian lands of the Winne- damage by fire and water to the stocks of the various | onacer of the judiciary, manager of street order of things, with every prospect of early penebaypasye a yi ct a theipinn occupants, principally insured, is estimated at about | resuming amicable relations with the general country, were 5 eight thousand dollars. The building was: damaged to contracts, lessee. of temporary Court House - the time ‘that Co assem. | R2tly seven thousand acres were taken for the extent of thirteen hundred dollazs, and insured. buildings, side-partner in the Assessment Bu- | Sovernmen' By eg actual settlement under the Homestead law, and ‘A discharged soldier, supposed to have been James | reau, and standing candidate for the State bles nearly if not all of those States have twenty-one thousand acres were filed under ‘Wilson, of Company B, Bixty-ninth New York Volua- | Senate, This club is in a very flourishing con- been regenerated, their constitutions and laws the Preemption law. The tendency of emigra- instantly crushed ede side sal lacoleems op tetas soit oat fap npetonenAaggery i gossaage ley ee ec tee aes weitlon | ton in this direction is e wholesome evidence Sixty Afth street, by a train of Hudson River Railroad very prosperous. . @ country club and their representatives: be knocking at the that the people are determined to waste no time |. house on Long Island Sor and a fleet of in a The mentersof she vsiow slaging societee intend | twomty or pred a — ‘A photograph | 200rs of our national legislative balls for ad- lp yr edpen Soda gga ing to take part in the approaching Sacngerfest marched missis ‘Su it least, the present indica- im procession 10 the City Hall last evening at nine | Of the club house, with President Tweed stand- peace sede sted ge ‘alty with splendid field for our discharged soldiers as o'clock, with Chinese lanterns and torches. ‘The Phila- | ing on the balcony and looking at the yachts P P well as for emigrants from foreign countries. dolphia delegation did not arrive till midnight, when they-| as if he owned them all, is one of the works of | Which the Southern people are wheeling into | quis iatter class, who remain in our large were received by the Mayor. A song of welcome was | art most prized by city politictans and conspi- | Hine. Tired, roar and a = the | cities until their last dollar is exhausted sung by the vast muftitude of voices, with considerable | ouoysly exhibited in barrooms. The glory despotism oo! rebellion ; ickened, or purloined by the sharks who sur- effect, after which the Mayor having made afew remarks, sore and disheartened by the priva- they ps dedto Germania Assewbly Rooms. The grand which has departed from Tammany proper now ti a which mi haa round them from the moment of their concert will be given this evening. rests upon the Americus Club. Its members lons snd sufferings per Seereene ji arrival in Castle Garden, would do well to ‘That very numerous portion of the great pubtic uniniti- | take the very best care of themselves and each | brought to their doors, they receive | i115 their faces to the West, without a single ated in the mysteries of the Petroloum Exchange, oll | other, They pay an entrance fee of about one | *? restoration policy of the President with day's delay -in this city. While they remain bubbles and oil speculations, will dnd in the article oa | hundred and fifty dollars, and five dollars a | Pe? arms. The great mass of the Southern here they are the victims of railroad runners, hese matters published in thi ing’s Hi , tae mars nine i meray seme | oath ta duet. During the summer toy | Po0D® role at the opportunity to render] soteing houe runnre and every oter eas : . peyt Pemaagigebtcd of rascals; and when their money is exhausted machinery by which the oily “ring” accomplish their | Fusticate at the luxurious club house, drink z dosigns, with what facility they are enabled to fleece the | the best of wines and lay their plans | Pointed for the purpose of bringing them | 440, ar» compelled perforce to remain deni- unsophisticated, and how a capital of brass and cunning, | for the fall elections; and in winter back to the Union fold, and restoring peace zens of this overcrowded city, and group them- in the absence of one of gold or greenbacks, can subserv0 | the cla headquarters are transferred to the | ®04 tranquillity totheir several States. The in- | seiveg into tenement houses, where they become the purposes of acquiring sudden wealth. hy fe ‘A new steamer intended for the Southern trade, namea | Cosmo, at the corner of Broadway and Ninth samt vip toatl ns ssa i most fruitful agents of contagious diseases, and the Leo, was launched at the shipyard between Bridge | Street. Nearly every member of the Americus iB! ‘A many of them finally a burden upon the tax- very soon forget. They now realize the value poying public and Gold streets, Brooklyn, yesterday afternooa. is an officeholder; for, to hold office under the The stock market was dull and variable yesterday. It | Tammany democracy, it is necessary to join the of the Union, and can appreciate its many The broad lands of the West invite them to comfort and fortune; but, unfortunately, many improved in the afternoon, and afterwards receded frac- | 4 noricus Club. The infil f St blessings. If let alone by the disunion and tion, Governments were strong. Gold was quiet, but | m0 12 anne ence disorganizing factions of the North, and per-| Cr tha emigrania, although provided with 1 means when they arrive here, know not where Yery frm, and cloved a 14234 in the afternoon, and at ee La abe Me eee stlecn ces Soke oak RE’ CHR ea The New System of Political Manage- | provide for his followers, and to put down through the assistance of the practical policy | +, tim in order to employ their money and of Epomienhssigeaaon,, Seay, « will aoon come, their labor with profit; and thus men, whose in- dustry would be invaluable in the fields of the ment—Clubs Are Trumps. those who do not believe in the club system of ‘ The Know Nothing party invented a new | management. Doubtless the power and the forth the most thoroughly loyal of any section ee ee Western States, remain here to vegetate into worthless members of society. There is a dis- system of political management. By assem-| success of the Americus suggested to Belmont bling in secret clubs or lodges they were | and Barlow the idea of their “Shent-per-shent” The only danger which now exists arises enabled to get their voters well in hand and to | Association, just as the success of the Loyal | from the officiousness and intermeddling of the position on the part of the Legislatures of bring them to the polls with something like | Leaguers induced the poet Bryant to start a radical revolutionary faction and the secession- | some of the Western States to extend practical military precision. The republicans adopted | Free Trade club among the republicans. “The | ists, of the North. Both of these factions in | encouragement to emigrants. Missouri, we be- this idea, and formed Wide Awake clubs to| sprig of Tammania” grows so finely on the | the Northern States bave already assumed | jieve, has already moved in the matter; and it elect a President in 1860. The plan worked so | Americus grounds that the shoddyites. have be- | an attitude of hostility to the Presi-| ig said that the Legislature of Minnesota, at its well that it was revived in 1864,;-and the | come envious of its fruits: Let Governor Fen- dent’s policy, and are doing all that lies within | noxt session, will make an appropriation for | campaign was managed exclusively, on the | ton muster up pluck enough to cut-it down by their power to prevent: its being successful. | the same purpose. Thousands of acres in Ten- republican side, by Loyal League clubs. The | removing the Mayor and the heads of depart- They are encouraging the old secession leaders nessee, Kentucky and Virginia are now await- system, having been thus approved by three | ments in this city, and the republican clubs will in various. ways,. and inciting the blacks to | ing the advent of white labor. It would be successful canvasses, now bids fair to com- | have everything their own way; for the Signor | mutiny, and thus threatening another revolu~') wige policy in the Legislatures and landowners pletely supersede the old political organiza- | Mantilini Marbleu will be sure'to upset the ket- | tion. . The organs of the Northern secessionists | in these and all the Western States to offer stib- tions. The political leaders have endorsed it, | les, smash the crockery and get the “Shent- | are glorifying the leading rebels, constantly | stantial inducements to emigration thither, and and are determined to use it as a novel and | per-shent” Club in hot water in a very liitle lauding them, while the Jacobins of New Eng- | to furnish inforination as to the location, quality effective means of party management. For the | while. land boldly assert their determination not to | and price of land. present the popular clubs may be allowed to TOR SE Nee permit any of the newly elected representa- The emigration’ from Ireland this summer die out, since they can easily be reorganized Tae Heeatp Movement to Pay Orr tue Na- | tives from the Southern States admission into | will be unprecedented. Thousands are now on the eve of the next Presidential election; | Trova, Deet—Joun Bout Bewitperev.—We | Congress, except they come through their plax waiting transportation in the ports of Queens- but the select clubs of party leaders, now | publish to-day a remarkable editorial from the | of universal negro suffrage. Thus, while the | town and Liverpool; but there are not yeasels formed or in proéeas of formation, will be eus- | London Standard, embodying an extract from | rebel organs in our midst are defending the | enough to accommodate them. Within the next tained in order to act as inside “rings” in con- | the Toronto Globe, in reference’ to'the proposi- | rebel leaders and encouraging them to retain | two months these people will be in New York trolling patronage and nominations. tion of the New York Herat for the payment, | their hostility to the federal government, the | or Boston. What are we to do with them? It The radical republicans of this city already | by voluntary subscriptions, of our national | radicals are furnishing them with the precise | jg manifestly our interest as well as theirs that have a club, called the Loyal League, which | debt of three thousand millions of dollars, in- | argument which they desire to appeal to the they should not be permitted to squat down in did the party some service at the last election, | curred in the suppression of the late great | people with should they consider it wise to | tenement houses or boarding houses. There and which is actively laboring to influence po- | Southern rebellion. Our Canadian cotempo-| try their hands once more. Those men who | should be @ society, like those which the Ger- litical events. This club is composed of promi- | rary, it will be perceived, believes that this | led the South into the rebellion, who staked | mans have established, to: take charge of these nent radical leaders, who assume the character | thing can be done; but the London Standard | their reputation upon its success, and remained people on their arrival, and direct them to such of private gentlemen when they wish to entrap | philosopher is so bewildered at the bare state- | foremost in all its efforts to break down the | jocalities in the West or South as may be avail- popular generals into visiting them, but resume | ment of the proposition that he hardly knows | power of the federal government, know that | apie for their little capital and labor. We know the réle of politicians when there is a Custom | what to do with it. After what has happened, | they can never regain their position of proml- | of no organization which is practically opera- House appointment to be made, ora delegation | however, in the complete extinguishment of | nence and influence in the restored Union, and | tiye in this respect, although we believe there to be sent on to Washington to find fault with | the supposed invincible Southern confederacy, | do not wish any connection whatever with | are societies assuming to look after the interests President Johnson. Another branch of the re- | Joho Bull inclines to the opinion that with the | the government at Washington. Nothing, there- | of the emigrants, but not so-much witha view publicans, under the lead ofthe poet Bryant, of | universal and irrepressible Yankee nation | fore, would please them better than the very | to provide bolen for them. in the West as to the Post, are now getting upa Free Trade club, | nothing is impossible. All his catalogue of | treatment of the South which the radicals keep them in the city, just where they are not in order to propogate their favorite idea of ap- | disasters, of demoralizations, of political, finan- | threaten. They will take it as an endorsement | wanted. The work of any society which would plying the principle of universal freedom, uot | cial and social disorders which were surely des- | of all that they have said :to the people of the | girect the mass of Irish emigrants to those fruit- only to the negro, but tocommerce. The initi- | tined to end in the ruin of the United States, | South in regar’ to the North. Their hope is | gy) regions where their labor and industry a public performance, aud a committes was te ation fee to this new club will be two hundred | and in the triumphant establishment of a great | that the course of the North will be such as to | would secure them. a- prosperous future, and See a ae reas vad eaeeaee mente, and fifty dollars, and the ten per cent scheme, | overshadowing Southern confederacy, have all | defeat all the hapes of the people for an amica- | regeue them from the demoralizing influences of Denier, emaing See Ogonallt pe. Cohn, Wood- as illustrated by Henderson, will be a distinc. | been scattered to the winds. The glorious victo- | ble adjustment in the Union, and compel them } 4 gent city, would not only be-a deed ot Chris- re "Walker and R. padre tive feature of the membership. It is under- | ries of Jeff. Davis ; the crushing revorses of tho | to look to their old leaders to get them out of |: tian charity, but a great public good. GeneraL. Suarwan anv Wave Hampron.—The rebel General Wade Hampton is out.in's long NEW YORK HERALD. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, errice x. W. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU BTS SESEECIERIOEE TEES ‘TERMS cash in advance. Money sent by mail will be ‘atthe risk of the sender. None but bank bills current in New York taken. THE DAILY HERALD, published every day in the year, Four cents per copy. Annual subscription price, $14. THE WEEKLY HERALD, every Saturday, ot Five cents per copy. Annual subscription price:— One Copy ..... Pew rm aaa Pea DO Postage five cents per copy for three months, Any larger number addressed to names of subscribers $1.50 cach. An oxtra copy will be sent to every club Often. Twenty copies, to one address, one year, $35, ‘and any larger number at same price, An extra copy will be sent to clubs of twenty. These rates make the ‘Wurxrr Haman the cheapest publication in the country. ‘The Evrorzax Epirion, every Wednesday, at 81x cents per copy, $@ per annum to any part of Great Britain, or $6 toany part of the Continent, both to include postage. ‘The Cativorma Epimox, on the Istand 16th of each month, at Six cents per copy, or $3 per annum. Apvearisements. to a limited number, will be inserted the Waray Heratp, the European and California Editions. Jos Pawvrixa of all deacription, in every variety, style ‘and color, executed with promptness and on liberal terms. VOLUNTARY CORRESPONDENCE, containing im- portant news, solicited from any quarter of the world; if used, will be liberally paid for. sge Our Forsian Con- RESPONDENTS ARE PARTICULARLY REQUESTED TO SEAL ALL LETTERS AND PACKAGES SENT US. NO NOTICE taken of anonymous correspondence. We do not return rejected communications. at length fell exhausted. A large crowd was soon around the sufferer, and he was conveyed into the adjoining es- tablishment. Volume XXX... No. 196 AMUSEMENTS TO-MORROW EVENING. GuaRp To Saratoga ap ALBANy.—Companies H and B of this command will, during the coming month, vielt Ps Albany and Saratoga. It is intended to make the ex- f cursion a very fine affair. The committee appointed to make arrangements will report at a special meeting of the two companies at the armory of Company B, om Tuceday bab next. ‘Burgess Corps’’ of Albany, it is expected, will make ample preparations to receWwe this representation of the military of the: Empire City. Dodworth’s full band will accompany them. It has bees atated that Lieutenant Remsen Appleby, a member of the committee of Company H, has Leland's Opera House fora grand hop. It isa well founded ru- mor. | Fire in Bigsoxern Streat.—Betwoon two and three o’clock yesterday morning a fire broke out om the eccon@® floor of building No. 74 Bleecker street, in the: hallway, under the atairs. The upper floor was burned out and part of the second floor. The following are the occu- pants:—Third floor—E. E. Shephard, silver plater. Lose meee Tosured for $500 in the areca ard Y Toaured for $500 in Tansee tapsennoe Company.- Scooud floor—J. M. Grennell & Co,, artificial limbe. Loss No insurance. G. W. Burgher, show ‘Loss A cards, Insured 250 in Kings Cou rance Company, Cc. N. Brows, else pola, aoe No insurance. Basement—A. Fog an) lumber. Damage by water $200. Insured for $1, rt wericlin Instance Come BROADWAY THEATRE, Broadway.—Tas Woxper— ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA. . NEW BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Wittow Corse— Love awp Mugper. WALLACK’S THEATRE. Broadway.—Inisa Eurcrant— Hanpr Anpr. WOOD'S MINSTREL HALL, 514 Broadway.—Ernortan Songs, Dancys, &c.—Cuatienas Dance—Tae Conscutrts. HELLER’S HALL, 385 Broadway.—Sax Fraxcisco Min- yar Eraorian Sinaia, Daxctso, &c.—Tue Buace RIGADE. : HOOLEY’S HALL, 201 Bowery.—Sam_ Suanrier’s Min- ereuis—Pancor Concert—Caxnivat or Fun—Bowe Squasu. BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Geonce Cuatstr's Mun- srruis in Songs, Dances, &c.—Docstx Bepopep Room. STADT THEATRE, 45 47 Bowery.—Tue Fata or Visunu's Macicat Sommers anp Give Exteetainuesrs. NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway.— Open from 10 A. M. till 10 P. M. New York, Sunday, July 16, 1865, oe = NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. Hy Our city subscribers will confer a favor by reporting ny of ourcity carriers who overcharge for the Herato. Country subscribers to the New Youx Heravp are re- quested to remit their subscriptions, whenever practi- cable, by Post Office Orders. It is the safest mode of transmitting money by mail. Advertisements should be sent to the office before nine o'clock in the evening. $10,000 in the. Stuyvesant, City, Brevoort, La- fayette and Tradesmen’s ance com| building is damaged to the extent of $1, Insured. Tho fire is supposed to be the work of an incendiary. Tar Free w Forty-rovrta Sraser.—As an act of jus- tice to the parties it should have been stated in these columns on Friday morning that to the police, Engine j No. 1, and to Lewis A. Lelamant and Alfred West, mem- bers of No. 1 Engine Company, great credit should be given for the assistance rendered in subduing that disas- trous conflagration. The two fremen named worked like, heroes, although the com had eee, disbanded and refused to co-operate with the missioners of the paid department. Sap Accipent—A Bor Instantiy Kitusp.—A boy named John McGraw, about twelve years of age, was almost instantly killed about eight o'clock last evening by being struck by some machinery which fell on him at the Allaire Works, foot of East Eleventh atreet, East river. Deceased resided at No, 303 Monroe stroct, The THE SITUATION. An exceilent and very interesting statement regarding affairs in the Indian Territory, the transactions of the Indians lately in alliance with the rebols, and an account of important negotiations recently entered into between them and United States officers sent out as commissioners from Shreveport, Louisiana, by General Herron, are con- tained in our Houston despatch published this morning. Everywhere the commissioners went they were well received by the Indians, and on the 2ist of June, at Doakesville, in the Choctaw nation, they were Coroner was notified, and will hold an inquest on the body this morning. Maetine dv Artacaes of Barnom’s Movkom.—A\ num: ber of the attaches of Barnum’s Museum met at 8t. -David’s Hall, Canal street, yesterday morning. All those who, so short a time since, used to ocoupy their morn- ings at rehearsal for some sensational drama were there Tony Denior, the American one-legged dancer, on his last logs; Mr. Harrison, the improvisator, with his ‘heart bowed down;"’ the tragedian, who was wont to walk the boards with many 4 strut, and the comedian, who used te convulse the audience with lavghter—all wore there, and Mr. John Bridgman was in chair. Thrown out of becary bee and many of them having had their ward- robes burn , they met to concoct some means by which met, according to agreement, by Colonel Pitchlynn, chief of the Choctaws. General Stand Watle, chief of the Cherokees, and anumber of other Indian leaders, anda temporary treaty was entered into with the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Seminoles and Creeks, in which these semi-civilized tribes bound themselves to cease hostilities against the United States and against these tribes whicn had taken part with the national govern- ment during the rebellion. These and other nations of the Indian Confederation, in a council previously held, had resolved to send dolegates to Washington to nego- tiate a treaty of amity with the government; but on the arrival of General Herron’s commissioners thoy were urgently solicited by the Imfians to consent that, instead of sending this delegation, they should be met 2 F 5 rc} i i stood that-every candidate wit! also be tequired~| armies-of the Unior ; the impending collapse of | their lexing difficulties. it to repeat one-of. Bryant’s poems-verbafim, and | our national finances; the exhaustion of the | This isthe work which the radical Jacobins that a rigid cross-examination in regard to the | loyal States; the scenes of violence and ineur- | of New Englindand the Northern secessionists H BF | 4) Mreewbeiven ded nll they appeal toa generous yi in their own country by government commissioners fully | political economy of frée trade, the beauty and | rection that were to come upon us, spreading a'| are‘now performing. This isthe special fletd'in | letter in defence of himself, in which he at- | nd to their professional, associates, for their kind ory empowered to enter into pormanont arrangements with | expediency of the ten per cent principle in all | reign of terror from New York to Califoraia, | which they are laboring with their new dis- | tempts to refute the: statements of General Bort and co-operedion ot 1241 esttesiee as wee the (hem. This was finally’ conceded, and it was arranged | transactions with the government, and the com- | have all collapsed with the great South Sea, or | union alliance. They are thus’ ndt only im- | Sherman in reference to the burning of Colum- } performances will take place will be announced as soom that the conference shalt take place on tho 1st of Sep. | parative excellencé of rhyme and blank verse | rather South Carolina, bubble of King Cotton | periling the whole country, but ate inciting | bia, He charges the-burning of that city upon ta Gall sirasgesonie-re Ate 16 eee cae come will be imperatively insisted upon before the | and his slaveholding and slavetreding Southern | insurrection and courting another war. As far | General Sherman:and his friends, while-the lat- to address. John Brid; at the com- tember next, at Armstrong's Academy, in the Choctaw Bation, whereupon Colonel Pitchlynn, the Choctaw chief, immediately issued a proclamation to that effect, which will be circulated among not only the civilized tribes but also the wild Indians of the prairies. It 1s anticipated that fifty thousand Indians will be present at the council. The masses of the Indians all through the region traversed by General Herron’s commissioners appeared to be overjoyed at the prospects of peace, and all agreed © commit no more acts of hostility against the govern- meat, and to cease their interference with the overland mail and western emigration. The Indian country has ‘been dreadfully impoverished and ravaged by the war. ‘The spoliations were committed by the rebel troops, with whom the Indians wore in alliance. Colonel Pitchlynn, in alluding to this fact, exclaimed, “God fave me from my friends!’ Tho robel Indians acquiesce with a vory good grace in the loss of their slaves by the @maacipation measures, but are much troubled about the confiscation question, fearing they will also lose, their lands. Two divisions of cavalry, under Generals Morritt and (Custer, are now on their march westward through Texas, from Shreveport and Alexandria, Louisiana, respectively. An ox-robel staff officer's narrative of a journey @hrough the South since the close of the war is con- \einued in our issue of to-day from last Friday’s Henan. ‘he present instalment of this interesting chronicle re- Batos to the condition of North Carolina, which, like ‘Virginia, exbibite the dreadful marks of ihe stubborn fend exhaustive four years contest, Governor Pierpoint, of Virginia, has issued a procia- gation appointing a special election to be held in the city of Richmond on the 25th inst, to choose a Mayor, Alder. pmen, Councilmen, and various other municipal officers, MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Fifteon ocean steamers left this port yesterday. Of this number two sailed for Liverpool, one for Glasgow, ‘one for Bromen, three for Norfolk and Richmond, one for Vera Cruz, two for New Orleans, one for Nassau, and ‘one cach for Charleston, Savannah, Wilmington and sion gman, mittee's headquarters, No. 4383¢ Broadway. Tax Late Fira —The loss of Mr. John Duane, No. 148+ Fulton streot, was not stated: in the account of the late. fire given yesterday. It was $13,000, on which he held. insurance for $10,000. Among the parties suffering by the fire who have not been noticed in the newspapers was Mr. Hugh Martia,. No. 161 Fulton street, dealer in boots and shoes. His loss: ‘was $3,000, $1,600 of which was covered by a policy im. the North River Insurance Company. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. Your statement in the Hxeato that the Albany City, Fire Insurance Company are insurers with the North. American Insurance Company on the stock of Jones & Kenwood, Nos. 10 and 12 Ann fos Bes $10,000 is er- roncous. This company have no poli on those num- bers, of in favor of that firm. T. H. CROSBY. TO THR EDITOR OF THE HERALD. In your list of sufferers. at the calamitous fire at Bar- num's Museum my name-was omitted. I beg to say the whole of my stage apparel was lost, and [ had .to, escape from the atreet balcony into No 214 (nox doar), aod saaea tie ee he = ro Ld in crinoline- blockar w aasisted ia im over theerowd. mien 6. HABAISON. © ter lays it at the door of Wade Hampton. It resolves itself down: to a question:of veracity between the two men.. We are inclined on that issue to place our faith in General:Sherman. Explosion of # Steam Boiler in. Fifty- fourth Street.. ONE MAN KILLED AND SEVERAL OTHRAS: SCALDED D—A STRAM SAWMILL. PARTIALLY candidate is admitted to the brotherhood. confederacy. Jobn Bull is at last forced to | as the negroes are concerned, the direct evils It is rumored that Mr. Thurlow Weed is try- } confess that our popular institutions are equal | which the radicals are bringing upon them can ing to patch up club of conservative republi- | to any emergency, and that “the great repub- | be seen in the comparison of their position in cans and war democrats at the Times office, in | lic” is indeed a Power among the nations of | Maryland to that of the other States where order to head off the Loyal Leaguers and the | the earth. Chase and his radical comrades have been Free Traders; but the Bohemians of the World er caer trying to insti! into the minds of the blacks are already in the field ahead of Weed. Bel- Tae Bia Fami.y Down Upon rae Casovet | fancy humanitarian notions of their rights and mont and Barlow are about to match their | m Futt. Buast.—The active and irrepressible | duties. There are no complaints of lawlessness “shent-per-shent” democracy against the ten per | Blair family have broken out in a fresh place, | or indolence from either the State of Maryland cent republicanism of the Post people. They | or rather in two or three fresh places. Hon. | or Missouri. Their services command fair are organizing a club, as they started their news- | Montgomery Blair, late Postmaster General, | wages and are in greatdemand. They have no paper, for the purpose of getting the custody of | who had to leave when “his time had come,” | trouble in adapting themselves to the new order the good things of the party. The initiation fee | has no notion of giving up his purpose of get- | of things. But in all of those States in which to their club is one hundred and fifty dollars, | ting back into the Cabinet. He has lately | the radicals have taken the negro under their and they expect to make considerable political | been getting off a regular set speech at Hagers- | special care, discontent, indolence and disorder capital by judiciously distributing honorary | town, Md., against Mr. Secretary Seward and | exist, just in proportion to the progress among memberships, We suppose that Mayor Gun-| his mysterious Mexican policy. This Mr. | them of the radical, theories of their rights. ther has been the happy recipient :f one of | Blair thinks that Mr. Seward is playing for the | With this discontent comes demoralisation, these memberships, for he has recently placed | surrender of Mexico to Louis Napoleon, body | disease and death. In all those sections: of the the World upon the list of corporation papers. | and soul, and opens a vigorous campaign | South where the Jacobin humanitarian dogmas Signor Mantilini Marbleu is to have charge of | against him upon this issue. Meantime General | of the rights of the blacks have not reached the the cuisine of the new club, assisted by his staff | F. P. Plair, Jr., in a flank movement, away off | emancipated slaves, they are content te pass of Bohemian cooks and bottle washers. All the | in Kentucky, has commenced a vigorous attack | through their transition state from slavery to viands are to be cooked in copper kettles, to | upon Secretary Stanton ‘and Chief Justice | that of citizens under the wise and safe policy suit the: palates of the copperhead members, | Chase. What the old man Blair is doing in | of the President. Butin spite of all: this oppo- and the table service is to be of brass, instead | conjunction with these movements we have | sition and efforts of the radicals and Northern of silver, to guard against peculation. Theclub | not learned; but we guess that he is not sleep- | secessionists to stir up discord andi complicate uniform and the livery for the Bobemian | ing upon his oars, The Chicago political firm | the adjustment of our national affairs, the wise waiters will be straw bats and linen pantaloons. | of Belmont, Barlow & Co. could probably | policy of restoration adopted by Mr. Johnson Army ale and porter are to be the standard | give us some valuable information on this mat- | will saceessfully work out its mission. The beverages, and the club groceries will all be | ter; but they “fight shy;” while the poets of | good sense of the great mass of the loyal peo- purchased at hardware stores. The Bohemians | the Evening Post, from the zeal with which | ple will cause them to rally to his support, and who are employed by Signor Mantilini Marblea | they support the attack of Montgomery Blair | carry him and his policy triumphantly through, will be kept as sober as possible; but in order | upon Mr. Seward, evidently bave a finger in | regardless of the threats and intrigues of the to prevent accidental intoxication all bottles | the Cabinet pie, which the parties concerned | Jacobin and copperhead disunionista of the will be placed upon the table corked. Gutta- | propose to divide among themselves. The | North. percha will be used to decorate the club house combination is active and extensive, and may in various new and fantastic forms. All games | be sufficiently powerful to demand the imme- Tavetow Ween Stas. m Tae Harness.— of chance, except faro, seven-up, poker, monte, | diate attention of Captain Forney. As for the | The President of late has been appointing a roulette, euchre and stock gambling, will be | danger of a surrender of Mexico to Louis Na- | good many country postmasters, North, South, strictly prohibited. The rules and regulations | poleon by Mr. Seward, it is alls myth. Presi- | Kast and West. It is, therefore, not surprising will be printed in Hebrew for the convenience | dent Johnson is master of the situation. His | that while this work is going on the venerable About eleven o'clock yesterday morning-the: boiler in the steam sawmill of Mossrs. Nolen and Steers, located on the northwest corner of Fifty-fourth. street and Secoad avenue, exploded with aloud report, completely demot- ishing sho shed attached to the main building and bury- ing Patrick Collins, the fireman, beneath the ruins who, in all probability, was almost instantly killed. OQweo Kelty and Jacob B. Lake, both of whom were saidito be engineers employed: in the mill, were dangerously scalded, besides being cut and bruised by the falling tim bera Officer Weith, of the Nineteoath: presinct, cow- veyed them to Bellevue Hospital. Kelty lives on the corner of Broomo-and Greone streets, and Mr, Lake at 49 North Third street, Williamsburg: Joseph Porter, Edwin Fay and Patrick Barry, em ployed in the mill, wore slightly injured, and, left for their ctive homes soon after the explosion. Imme- diately ir the occurrence Sergeant Fitzgerald, of the Nineteenth precinct, with a platoon of men, proceeded to the ruins aad rendered efficient service in preserving order, assisting the injured’ men, &o. The firemen lo cated in that section of the city rendered)suoh abt as the ciroumstances demanded. The proprictors of the mill, howovor, seemed to regard the ris of the feemen as worse than, useless, alleging that they wanecessarily tore down 4 portion of a shed which they found standing, and in the fall destroying much of the maebinery, which at the time was im a porfect state, Men were immediately set to, work removing the | debris with the viow of finding the body of Colling, the fireman who was supposed to have been crushed to death be- neath the ruins. About three o'clock in the afternoon his dead body was found near the boiler terribly cut and bruised. The police remowed the remains to the station house in Fifty-ninth street, next door to which the de- coased boarded, In regard to the cause of the explosion very little could be learned; the proprictors of the mill wero unable togive any facts tending to throw light on the matter. ft was rumored that thero was a scarcity of water in the boiler, while others alleged that tho boiler was imperfest, and consequently unsafe. From. what the police cowld learn they regard tho explosioa as the result of carelessness on the part of the engincer or some other attaché of the establishment. The facts, however, will be developed before the Coroner, who was “ ‘to hold an inquisition over tho romains of Colina, , Coromers’ Inquests. FATAL RAILROAD. ACCIDENT —- A SOLDIER. THE VICTIM. The Thirty first precinct police report thas James Me- Name, a discharged soldier tformerly attached to Com- pany B., Sixty-ninth regiment Naw York Velunteors, was run over cornet of Sixty-fitth steeet and Eleventh aye- nue late on Friday night, by a train of cars nr the Hudson River Railroad Cot and instantly kill His head and body were Terribly oct, por barons f How the accident occurred i unknown, but it is believed the deceased was lying asleep on the track, and failed to hear the approach of the train which crushed him todeath, The information relative to the case in ion of Gamble, who was notified to au eee rod show that the name of the deceased was toon, instead of James MoName. Deceased was about twoaty- tour years of. age and a native of Ireland. FATAL ACCIDENT TO A BLIND MAN. Yosterday afternoon James Murray, « blind man, sixty. “four years of age, who lived at 181 Rast Thurty-fourth street, while groping bis way over one of the Pager floors, went too near-an open window, ont of wi fell to the pavement, and was so terribly injured that he subsequently died mgBellevue Hospital. Coroner Gover was notified to hokd an inquest. New Jersey. Fine ax Heosow Citr.—A fire, which for some time throatoned to engulf the mammoth brewery of Rommmoelt & Lotcht, Washington village, took place on Saturday Movements of Generel Sherman, Beaufort, N. C. For next week twenty-four steamers of membe Christi M latfo tri Hi i of Hudson City, num. sane abel rs, and any reference to the fan | Mexican platform is the Monroe doctrine. He | Thurlow Weed should be in Washington, work: Cincanwatt, July 15, 1865, | moraing. The Fire Department Ma are alreaty odvortived, thirteen of which are osail mest | 1 th iu rooms will be deemed sufl- | intends to make it good. “He tx biding bis time. | ing up his “statistics.” Wo guose, too, that the " baring sig companion, rere Promyautiog slemneul” THe Major General Sherman and staff passed Wrough In. | Ginnapolia repterday en reuie $0.81, Lewis ' Bat gut dw ihe Court of General Sessions yesterday Judge Rus: J Age, broke out ia. house Mane Paliaadg avenue, clont grounds fox oxpulgign, The Chignge plat- b Mexico will not be ghandonea. Provence of this gnclent manager, gf ypolla agd

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